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Dr. Stuart White March 28, 2013 1 Mentoring the Mentors 1 Mentoring the Mentor Mentoring the Mentor Stuart White, DC, DACBN, CCN Whole Health Associates 1406 Vermont Houston, Texas 77006 713/522-6336 [email protected] www.wholehealthassoc.com www.doctorofthefuture.org 2 Mentor goals: To declare what is possible and establish a commitment to that possibility Address personal and professional barriers limiting the ability to serve Evolution of vision/mission/ethics that drive success Create immediate action steps to apply learning and growth Construct the round table of applied trophologists 3 Mentoring the mentor: Who are the mentors? – Practitioners Who are we mentoring? – Patients and GAP What’s the purpose? – Optimized life How does it work? – Whatever you learn you teach someone else (anyone else) Who’s is included? – Self selection, you pick yourself
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Page 1: Dr. Stuart White March 28, 2013 Mentoring the MentorsDr. Stuart White March 28, 2013 2 Mentoring the Mentors 4 Mentoring the mentor: Each participant attends monthly teleconferences

Dr. Stuart White March 28, 2013

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Mentoring the Mentors

1

Mentoring the MentorMentoring the Mentor

Stuart White, DC, DACBN, CCNWhole Health Associates1406 VermontHouston, Texas 77006713/[email protected]

www.doctorofthefuture.org

2

Mentor goals:

� To declare what is possible and establish a commitment to that possibility

� Address personal and professional barriers limiting the ability to serve

� Evolution of vision/mission/ethics that drive success

� Create immediate action steps to apply learning and growth

� Construct the round table of applied trophologists

3

Mentoring the mentor:

� Who are the mentors? – Practitioners

� Who are we mentoring? – Patients and GAP

� What’s the purpose? – Optimized life

� How does it work? – Whatever you learn you teach someone else (anyone else)

� Who’s is included? – Self selection, you pick yourself

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Mentoring the mentor:

� Each participant attends monthly teleconferences (1 hour in duration, 4th Thursday of month) creating a round table discussion/exploration of the dynamics and details of a nutrition-based holistic practice

� Each participant chooses how to convey the notes and information to their world and community – no information squandering

Learning wisdom -

Never seek a lesser moment!

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Review - Distinguish yourself

• It is more apparent why people are choosing alternative health care professionals who specialize in a functional approach• No matter you specialty or technique you must distinguish yourself as an expert – people are just seeking to understand and they need you to do so• Typically in the healthcare industry people are receiving shallow answers that leave them puzzled with the mystery of “Why is this happening to me?” and “ What can I do about it?”• Trends research over 10 years ago identified a number of factors essential to being successful in the nutritional field –one of those was establishing yourself as an expert

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Review - Explanation as hope

• The practitioner’s ability to explain health issues and therapeutic outcomes

creates an inflation of understanding in the patient which feels like hope

• Today in the professional world there is so much avoidance of ‘giving false hope’ that often we end up offering little hope at all

• I propose another model that bolsters hope and expectation and subsequently practices accountability as to whether the therapeutic endeavors are achieved or

not

• As long as the hope that has been instilled is revisited and acknowledged as being accomplished or not the betrayal of false hope can be avoided

• So as an example, if a practitioner was describing the potential for nutritional intervention through supplements and diet modification to improve the lipid

profile, then s/he would need to revisit to success or failure of the experiment

within a reasonable period of time • Our community is starving for legitimate hope, as a starting place, as

empowerment to begin, as an idea to act upon• There is genius in hope

Seven PillarsUnified Mechanisms

of Health

Promoting Physiology

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7 Pillars of Healing7 Unified Mechanisms of Health

�Endocrine/Hormonal

�Glycemic Management

�pH Bioterrain

�Immuno-Inflammatory

�Circulatory Status

�Digestive Potency

�Cellular Vitality

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Normal

Miracle

Endocrine

Hormonal

GlycemicManagement

pH

Bioterrain

Minerals

Immune

Inflammatory

Circulatory

Status

Digestive

Potency

Cellular

Vitality

Practice Aging -

Be glad of life, because it gives you the chance to love and to work and to play and to look up at the stars; to be satisfied

with your possessions; to despise nothing in the world except falsehood and meanness, and to fear nothing except

cowardice; to be governed by your admirations rather than your disgusts; to covet nothing that is your neighbor’s except

his kindness of heart and gentleness of manners; to think seldom of your enemies, often of your friends … and to

spend as much time as you can with body and with spirit. These are little guideposts on the footpath to peace.

Henry Van Dyke

Understanding Detoxification

Stuart White DC, DACBN

Lee Carroll B.Sc.

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Mentoring the Mentors

Topics

1. Liver detoxification

2. Cytoprotection and Nrf2/ARE

3. Gut flora dysbiosis

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Detoxification:“The efficient removal from the

body of chemicals likely to effect tissues”

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Source of Toxins in the Body

1. Environmental chemicals or contaminants

2. Food chemicals or contaminants

3. Drug therapy

4. Metabolism e.g. steroid hormones, bile acids

5. Endogenous toxins, i.e. abnormal metabolism, dysbiosis

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Conditions Caused or Exacerbated by Toxin Overload

� Immune deficiency

� Neurological disorders

� Chronic inflammatory disorders

� Allergies

� Autoimmune disease

� Liver damage, kidney damage etc

� Leaky gut syndrome

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Ways in which the Body Deals with Toxins in Body Fluids

1. Storage in adipose tissue

2. Direct elimination via the kidneys, lungs etc without further processing

3. Elimination via the urine, bile etc after processing (biotransformation) by the liver

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Biotransformation of Toxins

� The aim of biotransformation is to render the toxin more easily excreted

� Reactions involved in the biotransformation of toxins by the liver can be divided into two distinct categories:

� Phase I reactions

� Phase II reactions

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Phase I Reactions

� Largely dependent on cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes

� Involves the generation of free radicals

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Phase II Reactions

� Process the by-products of phase I reactions

� Metabolites then excreted from the body

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Bioactivation

� Phase I reactions can result in the production of more toxic substances - bioactivation

� These more toxic substances can:

� Be further metabolized by Phase II enzymes, which renders them harmless and increases excretion

� Cause liver damage (hepatotoxicity)

� Have a teratogenic effect

� Lead to immunological reactions

� Cause mutation by binding with DNA21

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Influencing Detoxification Processes

� In order to adequately process toxins there has to be a balance between Phase I and Phase II enzymes

� If Phase II is overloaded or inefficient, toxic substances from Phase I metabolism will increase

� This increases the risk of hepatotoxicity and tissue effects more broadly

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The Nrf2/ARE Pathway

� A new perspective on detoxification

� A basic cellular survival mechanism

� A primordial pathway, fundamental to all animals' cells, it describes a targeted approach to cytoprotection

� The Nrf2/ARE pathway is a dynamic response induced by oxidative/chemical stress on the cell that is fundamentally new and novel

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Functions of the Nrf2/ARE Pathway

� Nrf2 is expressed in all tissues, but levels vary, with higher levels in key detoxifying organs: the liver and kidneys

� Activation of Nrf2 activates more than 200 genes

� Nrf2 activation enhances DNA repair, hememetabolism, efflux transport of toxins andglutathione synthesis

� It activates detoxification, stabilizes proteins,strengthens cellular integrity and reduces the inflammatory response

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Functions of the Nrf2/ARE Pathway

� Key antioxidant enzymes are induced, including catalase, superoxide dismutase (SOD), thioredoxin, peroxiredoxin, sulfiredoxin, ferritin, metallothionein and haem oxygenase 1 (HO-1)

� Key phase II enzymes are also induced, including glutathione S-transferases (GSTs) and NAD(P)H: quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1)

Maher J, Yamamoto M. Toxicol Appl Pharmacol 2010; 244(1): 4-15Lewis KN, Mele J, Hayes JD et al. Integr Comp Biol 2010; 50(5): 829-843Itoh K, Mimura J, Yamamoto M. Antioxid Redox Signal 2010; 13(11): 1665-1678

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Nrf2/ARE in Health and Disease Prevention

� Involvements of Nrf2/ARE in maintaining health and preventing disease:

� Healthy aging and longevity

� Protection against radiation

� Benefits in diseases involving oxidative damage and inflammation

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What is Gut Flora?

� A large, diverse and dynamic population of microorganisms

� Native bacteria are acquired during birth and during the first and second years of life

� Transient bacteria are continuously being ingested from the environment via:� Food� Water� Probiotics

Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

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Distribution of Gut Flora

� The stomach and duodenum have very low numbers around 103 cfu per g of contents

� There is a progressive increase along the jejunum and ileum from 104 → 107 cfu/g

� The large intestine contains around 1013-14 cfu/g

1014 = 100,000,000,000,000

Jones BV, 2010 A metazoan perspective: The human gut mobile metagenome, Gut Microbes 1:6, 415-431

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Bacteria ‘R’ US

Only one out of every ten cells in our body is human!

Bacterial

Human

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Gut Flora Diversity

� Up to 40,000 different species of bacteria found across the human gut1

� Every person has a pattern of predominant and subdominant species that is unique to them2

� Some bacterial strains are unique to each person2

1. Frank DN, Pace NR Gastrointestinal microbiology enters the metagenomics era. Curr Opin Gastroenterol 2008; 24: 4 -10

2. Jones BV, 2010 A metazoan perspective: The human gut mobile metagenome, Gut Microbes 1:6, 415-431 Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

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Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

..

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3 Functions of Gut Flora

Metabolic functions:

� Fermentation of nondigestible carbohydrates which promotes the growth of the microflora and the production of short chain fatty acids (SCFA)

� Salvage of dietary energy

� Enhanced absorption of mineral ions e.g. calcium, magnesium and iron

Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

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3 Functions of Gut Flora

Metabolic functions:

� Production of some vitamins, e.g. K, B5, B7, B9, B12

� Synthesis of amino acids from ammonia or urea

� Control of colonic pH

� Metabolism and enterohepatic circulation of xenobiotics

Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

Roberfroid MB, Bornet F, Bouley C et al. Nutrition Reviews 1995; 53(5): 127-130

35

3 Functions of Gut Flora

� Protective functions:

� Provide a barrier effect that prevents the invasion of pathogens and by the excretion of antimicrobial substances

� Trophic functions:

� Control of epithelial cell proliferation and differentiation

� Immune system development and regulation

Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

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What is Dysbiosis?

� Metchnikoff (1907) was the first proponent of probiotics. Described dysbiosis as altered pathogenic bacteria in the gut1

� The state of disordered microbial ecology that causes disease2

� A breakdown in the balance between protective versus harmful intestinal bacteria 3

1 Hawrelak JA, Myers SP. Alt Med Review 2004; 9(2): 180-197

2 Pizzorno JE, Murray MT (eds). A Textbook of Natural Medicine, 2nd Edn, Vol 1. Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh, 1999, pp.110-111

3 Tamboli CP, Neut C, Desreumaux P et al. Gut 2004; 53: 1-4

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Common Causes of Dysbiosis

� Diet including excessive protein, excess refined carbohydrates, lack of fiber, excess fat, sulfer

� Antibiotics� Stress� Decreased immune status (especially low SIgA)� Decreased gut motility and poor digestive function� Low hydrochloric acid production� Intestinal infection and infestation� Altered intestinal pH

Hawrelak JA, Myers SP. Alt Med Review 2004; 9(2): 180-197Pizzorno JE, Murray MT (eds). A Textbook of Natural Medicine, 2nd Edn, Vol 1. Churchill Livingstone, Edinburgh, 1999, pp 111.

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Diseases Linked to Dysbiosis

Autoimmune Diseases

� Crohn’s disease

� Ulcerative colitis

� Rheumatoid arthritis

� Ankylosing spondylitis

� Chronic active hepatitis

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Diseases Linked to Dysbiosis

Gut Disorders

� Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS)

� Flatulent dyspepsia

� Certain types of food sensitivities

� Chronic diarrhea and constipation

� Gastrointestinal infections

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Diseases Linked to Dysbiosis

Other Disorders

� Allergies such as asthma and hay fever

� Poor immunity

� Chronic skin disorders

� Insulin Resistance and Diabetes

� Neuropsychiatric problems especially autism??

� Obesity?? Depression??

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References for Previous slides

Crohn’s Disease

Rashid T, Ebringer A. Autoimmune Dis 2012; 2012: 539282

Kranich J et al. Semin Immunol 2011; 23(2): 139-145

Pöllänen R et al. J Autoimmun 2009; 32(3-4): 172-177

Mason RM et al. Br Med J 1958; 1(5073): 748-751

Blaser M. Nature 2011; 476(7361): 393-394

Plantinga TS et al. Curr Opin Pharmacol 2012 [Epub ahead of print]

Lecat A et al. Biochem Pharmacol 2010; 80(12): 2021-2031

Morgan AR et al. Hum Immunol 2012; 73(4): 416-420

Rheumatoid Arthritis

de Almeida DE et al. FEBS Lett 2011; 585(23): 3619-3626

Scott IC et al. Best Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2011; 25(4): 447-468

Firestein GS. Nature 2003; 423(6927): 356-361

Mangat P et al. Arthritis Res Ther 2010; 12(3): 209

de Smit MJ et al. Anaerobe 2011; 17(4): 196-200

Detert J et al. Arthritis Res Ther 2010; 12(5): 218

Hoovestol RA, Mikuls TR. Curr Rheumatol Rep 2011; 13(5): 431-439

Scher JU, Abramson SB. Nat Rev Rheumatol 2011;7(10): 569-578

Ebringer A, Wilson C. J Med Microbiol 2000; 49: 305-311

Toivanen P. Ann Rheum Dis 2003; 62(9): 807-811

Scher JU et al. Arthritis Rheum 2010; 62(Suppl 10): 1390

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References for Previous slides

Ankylosing Spondylitis

Rashid T, Ebringer A. Autoimmune Dis 2012; 2012: 53928

Pöllänen R et al. J Autoimmun 2009; 32(3-4): 172-177

Mason RM et al. Br Med J 1958; 1(5073): 748-751

Ulerative Colitis

Farrell RJ, Peppercorn MA. Lancet 2002; 359(9303): 331-340

Burke DA, Axon ATR. BMJ 1988; 297: 102

Olusanya O, Steinruck H, Aleljung P et al. Zentralbl Bakteriol 1992; 276(2): 254-263

Giaffer MH, Holdsworth CD, Duerden BI. Gut 1992; 33(5): 646-650

Hartley MG, Hudson MJ, Swarbrick ET et al. Gut 1993; 34(1): 63-67

Schultsz C, Moussa M, van Ketel R et al. J Clin Pathol 1997; 50(7): 573-579

Farina C, Caprioli A, Luzzi I. Ital J Gastroenterol 1995; 27(9): 498-500

Cummings JH, Macfarlane GT, Macfarlane S. Curr Iss Intest Microbiol 2003; 4(1): 9-20

Bullock NR, Booth JC, Gibson GR. Curr Issues Intest Microbiol 2004; 5(2): 59-64

Campieri M, Gionchetti P. Gut 2001; 48(1): 132-135

Duffy M, O’Mahony L, Coffey JC et al. Dis Colon Rectum 2002; 45(3): 384-388

Irritable Bowel Syndrome

Lee RH, Pimentel M. Curr Gastroenterol Rep 2006; 8(4): 305-311Van Citters GW, Lin HC. Curr Gastroenterol Rep 2005; 7(4): 317-320

Quigley EM. J Dig Dis 2007; 8(1): 2-7Pimentel M et al. Ann Intern Med 2006; 145(8): 557-563

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References for Previous slides

Hepatitis

Yan AW, Schnabl B. Bacterial translocation and changes in the intestinal microbiome associated

with alcoholic liver disease, World J Hepatol. 2012 Apr 27;4(4):110-8. doi: 10.4254/wjh.v4.i4.110.

Xu M, Wang B, Fu Y, Chen Y, Yang F, Lu H, Chen Y, Xu J, Li L, Changes of fecal Bifidobacterium species in adult patients with hepatitis B virus-induced chronic liver disease, Microb Ecol. 2012

Feb;63(2):304-13. doi: 10.1007/s00248-011-9925-5. Epub 2011 Aug 4

Ekihiro Seki and Bernd Schnabl, Role of innate immunity and the microbiota in liver fibrosis:

crosstalk between the liver and gut J Physiol 590.3 (2012) pp 447–458

Allergy, Atopic Dermatitis

O'Regan GM et al. J Allergy Clin Immunol 2009; 124(3 Suppl 2): R2-R6

Caubet JC, Eigenmann PA. Immunol Allergy Clin North Am 2010; 30(3): 289-307

Schäfer T. Curr Opin Allergy Clin Immunol 2008; 8(5): 418-422

Ionescu JG. J Med Life 2009; 2(2): 146-154

Dokmeci E, Herrick CA. Semin Cutan Med Surg 2008; 27(2): 138-143

Feary J et al. Allergy 2011; 66(4): 569-578

Rook GA, Brunet LR. Gut 2005; 54(3): 317-320

Vael C, Desager K. Curr Opin Pediatr 2009; 21(6):794-800Gut Disorders

Kaur N, Chen C-C, Luther J and Kao JY, Intestinal dysbiosis in inflammatory bowel disease Gut Microbes 2:4, 211-216; July/August 2011

Guarner F. Digestion 2006; 73(Suppl 1): 5-12

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References for Previous slides

Immunity

Hsin-Jung Wu, Eric Wu, The role of gut microbiota in immune homeostasis and autoimmunity Gut

Microbes 3:1, 4–14; January/February 2012

Molloy MJ, Bouladoux N, Belkaid Y, Semin Immunol. Intestinal microbiota: shaping local and systemic immune responses, 2012 Feb;24(1):58-66

Metabolic

Patrice D. Cani* and Nathalie M. Delzenne, The Role of the Gut Microbiota in Energy Metabolism

and Metabolic Disease Current Pharmaceutical Design, 2009, 15, 1546-1558

E.O. Petrof, E.C. Claud, G.B. Gloor and E. Allen-Vercoe, Microbial ecosystems therapeutics: a new paradigm in medicine? Beneficial Microbes, March 2013; 4(1): 53-65

Neuropsychiatric

Bienenstock J, Collins S. 99th Dahlem conference on infection, inflammation and

chronic inflammatory disorders: psycho-neuroimmunology and the intestinal

microbiota: clinical observations and basic mechanisms. Clin Exp Immunol. 2010 Apr;160(1):85-91

E.O. Petrof, E.C. Claud, G.B. Gloor and E. Allen-Vercoe, Microbial ecosystems therapeutics: a new

paradigm in medicine? Beneficial Microbes, March 2013; 4(1): 53-65

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Spring CleaningCleanse | Rebalance | Revitalize

Lee Carroll B.Sc.

Spring Cleaning

� Support normal liver detoxification function

� Support the body’s normal cytoprotectivemechanisms

� Promote healthy and balanced gastrointestinal flora

1

Spring Cleaning Products

� LivCo®

� ChelaCo

� Cruciferous Complete™

� Gut Flora Balance Program

� Gut Flora Complex

� Prebiotic Inulin

� ProSynbiotic

� Vitanox®

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Mentoring the Mentors

Liver Detoxification Processes

� Herbs that support Phase I without having a similar effect on Phase II are generally not desirable

� Should aim at supporting both Phase I and Phase II simultaneously

� There is still much that we do not understand with regard to liver detoxification mechanisms and substances that influence them

� An approach involving the buffer of “chemical complexity” is desirable

3

LivCo

Schisandra fruit 6:1 ext 167 mg from Schisandra chinensis fruit 1.0 g

Rosemary leaf 5:1 ext 100 mgfrom Rosmarinus officinalis leaf 500 mg

Milk Thistle seed 70:1 ext 30 mgfrom Silybum marianum seed 2.1 gcontaining flavanolignans calc. as silybin 24 mg

Suggested use: 1 tablet 3 - 4 times daily

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LivCo

� Aid in the elimination of toxins and cleansethe liver

� Support healthy liver function and tissue integrity

� Protect liver tissue by supporting normal cellular defenses

� Provide antioxidant activity

� Support and maintain cellular health

� Stimulate the biosynthesis of protein and liver glycogen

� Support digestive health

� Ease the effects of everyday tension and stress5

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6

Rosemary

� Rosemary contains the antioxidant activitymolecules carnosol and carnosic acid

� Both of these are now understood to be potent primers of the Nrf2/ARE pathway

� For example both compounds have demonstrated potential neuro-supportive activity mediated by this pathway, which reflects on its traditional use for memory1,2

� Recently a single 750 mg dose of Rosemary herb improved speed of memory and alertness in healthy older adults3

1 Kosaka K et al. J Biochem 2010; 147(1): 73-81

2 Martin D et al. Biol Chem 2004; 279(10): 8919-8929

3 Pengelly A et al. J Med Food 2012; 15(1): 10-177

Milk Thistle

� Milk Thistle is the most important of all the liver herbs

� Supports normal liver function and normal liver repair processes

� Stabilizes hepatic cell membranes

� Supports normal hepatic and portal blood flow

� Its powerful antioxidant action helps protect the liver from the damaging effects of free radicals, generated by toxins and our own body processes

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ChelaCo

Hawthorn herb flowering tops 3:1 ext 100 mgfrom Crataegus monogynaherb flowering tops 300 mg Containing vitexin-2-rhamnoside 2.0 mg

Milk Thistle fruit 70:1 ext 100 mgfrom Silybum marianum fruit 7.0 gContaining flavanolignans calc. as silybin 80 mg

Garlic (Allium sativum) bulb powder 100 mg Containing alliin 2.0 mg

Suggested Use: 1 tablet 2 - 3 times daily with meals

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ChelaCo

� Encourage the healthy function of the organs of elimination (particularly the normal flushing of toxins from the tissues)

� Support the body's natural defenses against environmental insult

� Help maintain healthy blood and tissues

� Protect liver tissue by supporting normal cellular defenses

� Provide antioxidant activity

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Cruciferous Vegetables

� Research demonstrates that cruciferous vegetables, such as kale and Brussels sprouts, contain important phytonutrients that help protect against free radicals, the highly unstable molecules that can damage cells and genetic material

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Mentoring the Mentors

Cruciferous Complete

Each capsule contains:

Kale 300 mg

Brussels sprouts 300 mg

Vitamin K 4 mcg

Potassium 10 mg

Suggested Use: 2 capsules per day

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Cruciferous Complete

� Supports healthy liver function

� A source of vitamin K, which supports calcium absorption, blood clotting, and healthy liver function

� Provides antioxidant activity

13

� Gut Flora Complex

� Prebiotic Inulin

� ProSynbiotic

� Vitanox

GI Flora Balance Program

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Gut Flora Complex

Anise (Pimpinella anisum) fruit essential oil 125 mg

Andrographis herb 10:1 extract 100 mgfrom Andrographis paniculata herb 1.0 gContaining andrographolide 10 mg

Phellodendron stem bark 20:1 extract 80 mgfrom Phellodendron amurense stem bark 1.6 gContaining berberine 36 mg

Oregano (Origanum vulgare) leaf essential oil 75 mg

Suggested Use: 3 - 6 enteric capsules per day

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The Rationale

� The GI Flora Balance program is a holistic approach which cleanses at the same time as promoting balance between native bacterial colonies

� Microbial ecology moves toward a healthy balance

� Prebiotics are essential to this process

� Consider Prebiotic Inulin as a “Colonic Nutrient”

� GI flora need specific colonic nutrients (soluble fiber) which may be deficient in the diet

� Appropriate and individualized dietary advice is important for successful outcomes

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The Rationale

� Probiotics have a valuable role to play

� Probiotics used alone are beneficial however we need to recognize the limitations

� Probiotics are transient. Probiotics do not cleanse

� Probiotic foods contain lactic acid. Lactic acid is cleansing

� ProSynbiotic is a unique combination of probiotic organisms and colonic nutrients (soluble fiber)

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GI Flora Balance Protocol

Every day for 6 weeks

� Gut Flora Complex, 1 capsule twice per day

� Prebiotic Inulin, 1 teaspoon twice per day

� Both taken at the same time

As required include:

� Vitanox, 2 to 3 tablets per day

� ProSynbiotic, 3 capsules per day

(At a different time to the Gut Flora Complex. Separate by at least 2 hours.)

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GI Flora Balance Program Benefits

� Promotes healthy and balanced intestinal flora

� Cleanse the lower gastrointestinal tract

� Maintains a healthy GI environment

� Useful as an adjunctive treatment for gastrointestinal challenges

� Support healthy digestion, improve nutrient absorption

� Support healthy immune system function

� Maintains healthy skin

� Promote vitality and stamina

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Spring Cleaning Program

Every day for 6 weeks

� LivCo,2 tablets twice daily

� Cruciferous Complete, 1 capsule twice daily

� Gut Flora Balance Program

� ChelaCo, 1 tablet 2 - 3 times daily with meals if required

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Dr. Stuart White March 28, 2013

23

Mentoring the Mentors

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to

Professor Kerry Bone

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Principles at work

• Detoxification is vital to age-related decline and longevity objectives• The high density effect of research creates more and more commitment to this lifestyle as a sound way to live life and reduce morbidity• Every patient must be engaged in sequential and recurrent detoxification events to reduce the toxic burden associated with health status

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Primary Products

• lSequential detox:•Livco•Livton•Betacol•Vitanox•A F Betafood, Choline, Collinsonia

• Nrf2 support to incerase sirtuin and glutathione•Herbavital•Vitanox•Cruciferous

• Gut Flora Reboot:•Gut Flora Complex•Prosynbiotic•Zymex II, Multizyme, Wormwood•Zymex•Cataplex AC

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Dr. Stuart White March 28, 2013

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Mentoring the Mentors

Sequential Intervention

� By giving hope through discussion of therapeutic rationale and then accountably determine if the therapy had efficacy it is possible to initiate activity that may assist a person to make the changes that result in healing

� Sequential intervention and accountable follow-up can show what has worked and what may still need to be employed

� Promote an understanding of glycemic management and show the effect of corrective management

� Allow every condition to become a strategic consideration of possible etiology and therapeutic rationale – people are in search of experts – reveal yourself

� The comprehensive nature of nutritional therapy means there is always more physiology to optimize and support leaving an individual constantly refining as long as they wish to further improve their status

� If the practitioner is accountable s/he will be allowed to experiment with reasonable ideas

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Change the world

It wants to

Change the world

It wants to